Coat of arms of South Australia
State Coat of Arms of South Australia | |
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Versions | |
Adopted | 1984 |
Crest | Four Sturt's Desert Peas |
Torse | Gold, Red and Blue |
Shield | Blue; a gold circle representing the rising sun with an Australian Piping Shrike displayed and standing on the staff of a Gum Tree proper |
Supporters | None |
Compartment | A grassy mount with two Vines growing from it, each entwining their stakes; on either side of the shield stalks of Wheat and Barley; on the dexter (viewer's left) scattered with Citrus Fruits; and lying on the sinister side (viewer's right) two Cog Wheels with a Miner's Pick between them |
Motto | South Australia |
The coat of arms of South Australia is an official symbol of the state of South Australia. It was granted by Queen Elizabeth II on 19 April 1984. They replaced a coat of arms granted to the State in 1936 by King Edward VIII.
The shield has the piping shrike within a golden disc (representing the rising sun) on a blue background. The piping shrike is the unofficial bird emblem of South Australia and also appears on the state badge. The crest is the Sturt's desert pea, the floral emblem of South Australia, on top of a wreath of the state colours. The coat of arms has no supporters, but a 1984 proposal showed koala and wombat supporters.[citation needed] The compartment, or base, is a grassland with symbols of agriculture and industry, and a motto with the name "South Australia".
Historical arms
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The former South Australian coat of arms, used between 1936 and 1984.
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The proposed coat of arms of South Australia from 1984
See also
External links
- Use Australian English from July 2022
- All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English
- All articles with unsourced statements
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2024
- Emblems of South Australia
- Australian coats of arms
- Coats of arms with birds
- Coats of arms with cogwheels
- Coats of arms with wheat
- Coats of arms with pickaxes
- Coats of arms with fruit